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Bad.Technology

The newspaper of record for things that went very wrong.

164 fails indexed
16 categories
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// ON THIS MONTH IN TECH HISTORY

Latest fails

30 of 164
Government

Spain's 'Invincible' Armada Routed: Wrong Ships, Incompatible Cannons, Rotten Provisions, No Way to Coordinate the Invasion

In 1588, Philip II of Spain launched the most expensive naval expedition of the 16th century to invade Protestant England. The fleet of 130 ships failed not because of storms or English heroics, but because of compounding technical disasters: cannons whose shot didn't match the…

Engineering

Boeing 787 Dreamliner Lithium Battery Fires Force FAA to Ground Entire Global Fleet

On 7 January 2013, a Japan Airlines Boeing 787 caught fire on the ground at Boston Logan Airport. A lithium-ion battery in the auxiliary power unit had entered thermal runaway — a self-reinforcing overheating cycle — and ignited. Nine days later, an All Nippon Airways 787 made…

Defense Major Historical

Patriot Missile Floating-Point Bug Misses Incoming Scud, 28 US Soldiers Killed

On 25 February 1991, an Iraqi Scud missile struck a US Army barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, killing 28 soldiers and wounding 98 — the deadliest single attack on US forces during the Gulf War. The Patriot missile battery stationed to defend the barracks failed to engage the…

Startup

Ofo Burns $2 Billion in VC, Leaves 15 Million Users Waiting for Deposit Refunds

Ofo deployed 10 million dockless bikes across 250 cities in 20 countries, backed by $2.2 billion from Alibaba, DST Global, and Sequoia Capital China. By late 2018 it could not pay suppliers, bikes were piling up in graveyards of bent metal, and the deposit refund queue exceeded…

Infrastructure Historical

Denver Airport's $186M Automated Baggage System Shreds Luggage and Delays Opening by 16 Months

Denver International Airport, originally scheduled to open in October 1993, did not open until February 1995 — 16 months late — primarily because its $186 million fully automated baggage handling system consistently chewed up, misrouted, and shredded luggage during testing. The…

Product Historical

Segway Sells 140,000 Units in 10 Years Against Forecast of 10,000 Per Week

Segway launched with extraordinary secrecy and hype — inventor Dean Kamen predicted it would be bigger than the internet and sell 10,000 units per week. Instead, it sold approximately 140,000 units over its entire 20-year production run before being discontinued in 2020. The…

Startup Major Historical

WeWork Valuation Collapses from $47 Billion to Near-Zero After IPO Reveals Losses

WeWork filed for IPO in August 2019 with a $47 billion valuation, revealing massive losses, unusual governance provisions, and self-dealing transactions benefiting CEO Adam Neumann. The IPO was withdrawn in September. SoftBank, which had backed WeWork's valuation, ultimately…

Product Historical

AirPower Wireless Charger Cancelled 18 Months After Announcement Due to Overheating

Apple announced AirPower in September 2017 as a charging mat capable of simultaneously charging iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods anywhere on its surface. Eighteen months later, Apple quietly cancelled it without shipping a single unit, citing thermal issues from the overlapping…

Infrastructure Historical

GitHub Suffers Largest DDoS Attack in History: 1.35 Tbps via Memcached Amplification

GitHub was hit by what was then the largest distributed denial-of-service attack on record, peaking at 1.35 Tbps. Attackers exploited publicly exposed Memcached servers, which amplify traffic by up to 51,000x. GitHub absorbed the attack with Akamai's Prolexic DDoS mitigation and…

Security Major Historical

SolarWinds Supply Chain Attack Compromises 18,000 Organizations Including US Treasury

State-sponsored attackers (later attributed to Russia's SVR) inserted malicious code into SolarWinds' Orion network monitoring platform during the build process. The trojanised update was distributed to 18,000 customers including the US Treasury, State Department, and major…

Failed Projects Major

Quibi Shuts Down Six Months After $1.75B Launch — 2M Subscribers vs 7.4M Target

Quibi, a short-form mobile streaming service backed by $1.75 billion in funding, shut down in October 2020 just six months after its April 2020 launch. The service attracted approximately 2 million subscribers against a year-one target of 7.4 million. Quibi was designed for…